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9167 results for: ‘global learning outcomes’

  • Protecting children from war and violence

    In any society subjected to war or violence, children are the innocent victims. Even if they are not injured themselves, the experience is understandably traumatic.

  • Fellowship

    The University of Leicester’s International Professional Development Unit has welcomed many visiting postdoctoral fellows from a range of countries, including China, Saudi Arabia, and Kazakhstan.

  • Travel

    Providing infrastructure and procedures that enable staff and students to follow the University’s sustainable travel hierarchy of: ‘Avoid unnecessary travel; Reduce travel; Choose efficient low-carbon travel; Maximise the benefits of the travel.’

  • Leicester geneticist to deliver Richard III talk at international conference

    Professor Turi King (pictured) from our Department of Genetics and School of Archaeology and Ancient History will be giving a Special Plenary Lecture at the 10th International Society for Applied Biological Sciences (ISABS) Conference in Dubrovnik, Republic of Croatia...

  • Optics

    The MIXS optics were designed with inspiration from a lobster’s eye. This is because instead of using lenses, like how our eyes work, it uses mirrors to reflect the light. There are lots of small channels that allow the X-rays to be reflected and focused onto the detector.

  • International Competition Law

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  • International Competition Law

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  • Food and drink

    Find out more about food and drink at Leicester, including our outlets, UPAY Rewards and our sustainability.

  • Abolition and Adventure: Narratives of the Atlantic World

    Module code: EN7254 Accounts of global travel and adventure were extremely popular with eighteenth-century British readers.

  • Academic Freedoms and the University Ltd.

    Posted by Martin Parker in School of Business Blog on April 9, 2014 Voltaire once wrote “To learn who rules over you, simply find out who you are not allowed to criticize”. Professor of Organisation and Culture Martin Parker recently found out precisely what he meant.

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